Internet Fraud
The term "Internet
fraud" refers generally to any type of fraud scheme that uses
one or more components of the Internet - such as chat rooms,
e-mail, message boards, or Web sites - to present fraudulent
solicitations to prospective victims, to conduct fraudulent
transactions, or to transmit the proceeds of fraud to financial
institutions or to other connected with the scheme.
If you use the
Internet with any frequency, you'll soon see that people and
things online tend to move, as the saying goes, on "Internet
time." For most people, that phrase simply means that things
seem to happen more quickly on the Internet -- business
decisions, information-searching, personal interactions, to name
a few - and to happen before, during, or after ordinary
"bricks-and-mortar" business hours.
Unfortunately,
people who engage in fraud often operate in "Internet time" as
well. They seek to take advantage of the Internet's unique
capabilities -- for example, by sending e-mail messages
worldwide in seconds, or posting Web site information that is
readily accessible from anywhere in the world - to carry out
various types of fraudulent schemes more quickly than was
possible with many fraud schemes in the past.
The major types of
Internet fraud include Auction and Retail Schemes Online,
Business Opportunity/"Work-at-Home" Schemes Online,
Identity Theft and
Fraud, Investment Schemes Online, and Credit-Card
Schemes.
Source: United States Department
of Justice:
http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/fraud/internet/